Protocol for a longitudinal qualitative interview study: maintaining psychological well-being in advanced cancer - what can we learn from patients' and carers' own coping strategies?
Protocol for a longitudinal qualitative interview study: maintaining psychological well-being in advanced cancer - what can we learn from patients' and carers' own coping strategies?
Introduction
People with advanced cancer and their carers experience stress and uncertainty which affects the quality of life and physical and mental health. This study aims to understand how patients and carers recover or maintain psychological well-being by exploring the strategies employed to self-manage stress and uncertainty.
Methods and analysis
A longitudinal qualitative interview approach with 30 patients with advanced cancer and 30 associated family or informal carers allows the exploration of contexts, mechanisms and outcomes at an individual level. Two interviews, 4–12?weeks apart, will not only enable the exploration of individuals’ evolving coping strategies in response to changing contexts but also how patients’ and carers’ strategies inter-relate. Patient and Carer focus groups will then consider how the findings may be used in developing an intervention. Recruiting through two major tertiary cancer centres in the North West and using deliberately broad and inclusive criteria will enable the sample to capture demographic and experiential breadth.
Ethics and dissemination
The research team will draw on their considerable experience to ensure that the study is sensitive to a patient and carer group, which may be considered vulnerable but still values being able to contribute its views. Public and patient involvement (PPI) is integral to the design and is evidenced by: a research advisory group incorporating patient and carers, prestudy consultations with the PPI group at one of the study sites and a user as the named applicant. The study team will use multiple methods to disseminate the findings to clinical, policy and academic audiences. A key element will be engaging health professionals in patient and carer ideas for promoting self-management of psychological well-being. The study has ethical approval from the North West Research Ethics Committee and the appropriate NHS governance clearance.
Registration
National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Clinical Studies Portfolio, UK Clinical Research Network (UKCRN) Study number 11725.
e003046
Roberts, D.
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Appleton, L.
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Calman, L.
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Large, P.
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Grande, G.
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Lloyd-Williams, M.
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Walshe, C.
72082cff-ec9b-4efb-91de-29f845a65bd3
June 2013
Roberts, D.
c5c22eb6-a124-48cf-b460-1eb59d8b54dd
Appleton, L.
3a33e85a-282c-4469-a6ab-f29e6b808507
Calman, L.
9ae254eb-74a7-4906-9eb4-62ad99f058c1
Large, P.
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Grande, G.
e193edc1-d6fe-46f6-aa38-e7e804db0086
Lloyd-Williams, M.
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Walshe, C.
72082cff-ec9b-4efb-91de-29f845a65bd3
Roberts, D., Appleton, L., Calman, L., Large, P., Grande, G., Lloyd-Williams, M. and Walshe, C.
(2013)
Protocol for a longitudinal qualitative interview study: maintaining psychological well-being in advanced cancer - what can we learn from patients' and carers' own coping strategies?
BMJ Open, 3 (6), .
(doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2013-003046).
(PMID:23794566)
Abstract
Introduction
People with advanced cancer and their carers experience stress and uncertainty which affects the quality of life and physical and mental health. This study aims to understand how patients and carers recover or maintain psychological well-being by exploring the strategies employed to self-manage stress and uncertainty.
Methods and analysis
A longitudinal qualitative interview approach with 30 patients with advanced cancer and 30 associated family or informal carers allows the exploration of contexts, mechanisms and outcomes at an individual level. Two interviews, 4–12?weeks apart, will not only enable the exploration of individuals’ evolving coping strategies in response to changing contexts but also how patients’ and carers’ strategies inter-relate. Patient and Carer focus groups will then consider how the findings may be used in developing an intervention. Recruiting through two major tertiary cancer centres in the North West and using deliberately broad and inclusive criteria will enable the sample to capture demographic and experiential breadth.
Ethics and dissemination
The research team will draw on their considerable experience to ensure that the study is sensitive to a patient and carer group, which may be considered vulnerable but still values being able to contribute its views. Public and patient involvement (PPI) is integral to the design and is evidenced by: a research advisory group incorporating patient and carers, prestudy consultations with the PPI group at one of the study sites and a user as the named applicant. The study team will use multiple methods to disseminate the findings to clinical, policy and academic audiences. A key element will be engaging health professionals in patient and carer ideas for promoting self-management of psychological well-being. The study has ethical approval from the North West Research Ethics Committee and the appropriate NHS governance clearance.
Registration
National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Clinical Studies Portfolio, UK Clinical Research Network (UKCRN) Study number 11725.
Text
Protocol for a longitudinal qualitative interview study maintining psychologiacl well-being in advanced cancer BMJ_Open-2013-Roberts-1.pdf
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Available under License Other.
More information
Published date: June 2013
Organisations:
Faculty of Health Sciences
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 366301
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/366301
PURE UUID: ad2e9992-ba9a-47ed-843e-5ea650a6256f
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Date deposited: 01 Jul 2014 09:47
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:41
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Contributors
Author:
D. Roberts
Author:
L. Appleton
Author:
P. Large
Author:
G. Grande
Author:
M. Lloyd-Williams
Author:
C. Walshe
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